Articles

Projects walkthroughs, tool teardowns, interviews, and more.

  1. What Do You Do, Again? Part IV

    By Ryan Sholin, Kavya Sukumar, and Nicole Zhu

    Posted on

    As we approach the fifth anniversary of Source’s existence, we’re taking an anecdotal look at the humans who do the often confusingly described work of journalism technology, technology in journalism, data…stuff…in newsrooms, and so on. We set out to discover what happens behind the titles, one job at a time.

  2. Stuck in a Rut? Tackle Newsroom Frustrations With Board Games

    By Sara Konrad Baranowski and Andrea Suozzo

    Posted on

    For our SRCCON session, we wanted to capture some of these workplace frustrations, but approach solutions in a different way. What if, instead of feeling discouraged and overwhelmed, we developed processes to boil those challenges down to their basic elements—people involved, tasks, obstacles and goals? What if we figured out how to tackle each challenge in a measured way, one step at a time?

  3. Things You Made, Oct 10

    By Lindsay Muscato

    Posted on

    Our regular biweekly roundup of projects and updates.

  4. Event Roundup, October 9

    By Erika Owens

    Posted on

    Computation+Journalism this weekend, plus upcoming deadlines.

  5. What Do You Do, Again? Part III

    By Marie Connelly, Chris Keller, and Terry Parris, Jr.

    Posted on

    As we approach the fifth anniversary of Source’s existence, we’re taking an anecdotal look at the humans who do the often confusingly described work of journalism technology, technology in journalism, data…stuff…in newsrooms, and so on: What exactly does a producer do? How about an engagement reporter? Is “data editor” the same role across newsrooms? We set out to discover what happens behind the titles, one job at a time. (Read Part One and Part Two.)

  6. Visualizing Mass Shootings

    By Erin Kissane and Lindsay Muscato

    Posted on

    Over the past two years or so, we’ve kept tabs on our community’s work around guns in America. We’ve seen a wealth of data visualizations and a huge breadth of interactive projects that bring clarity to stories of gun violence and mass shootings—projects often assembled quickly amidst the chaos of breaking news.

  7. How We Made Cassini’s Grand Tour

    By Brian Jacobs

    Posted on

    How National Geographic made a visualization of Cassini’s trip through the Saturn system.

  8. Event Roundup, October 3

    By Erika Owens

    Posted on

    Apply to participate in some great upcoming events, plus ONA this week.

  9. What Do You Do, Again? Part II

    By Anne Li, Brittany Mayes, and Steven Rich

    Posted on

    What does a producer do? How about an engagement reporter? Is “data editor” the same role across newsrooms? We set out to discover what happens behind the titles, one job at a time.

  10. Building Better Story Formats for Live Coverage

    By Hamilton Boardman, Alastair Coote, and Tiff Fehr

    Posted on

    Live coverage is a big challenge for newsrooms. It sits at the intersection of high stress moments and production-intensive story forms. We use a variety of tools to help us with breaking news, but they’re typically not forms we use day to day. And on top of that, we still need to think about improvements and new ways to reach our readers. SRCCON 2017 provided a unique opportunity for us to discuss the pros and cons of story forms we use for breaking news and live coverage.

  11. Things You Made, Sept 26

    By Lindsay Muscato

    Posted on

    Our regular biweekly roundup from the journalism code community.

  12. What Do You Do, Again?

    By Mike Janssen, Tyler Machado, and Julia Wolfe

    Posted on

    What does a producer do? How about an engagement reporter? Is “data editor” the same role across newsrooms? We set out to discover what happens behind the titles, one job at a time.

  13. Event Roundup, September 25

    By Erika Owens

    Posted on

    Meetups around the world this week, plus apply to attend the first Washington News Nerds unconference for women.

  14. Shields Up: Using Signal Without Giving Your Phone Number

    By Martin Shelton

    Posted on

    Encrypted messaging apps like Signal, as well as WhatsApp and Viber, use your phone number as your main username. This means that if I want to chat with someone on these apps, I have to give them my phone number. But we may have many reasons—both practical and principled—not to share our number with someone. These digits are personal.

  15. Things You Made, Sept 12

    By Erin Kissane and Lindsay Muscato

    Posted on

    Our biweekly roundup of projects in the journalism/code universe.

  16. Databae, Better Bots, and the Automation We Need Right Now

    By Steven Rich and Aaron Williams

    Posted on

    Find practical approaches to creating software to cover democracy, from a SRCCON 2017 session

  17. Con el objetivo de mover el avispero

    By Sydette Harry and Gabriela Rodríguez Berón

    Posted on

    Durante Internet Freedom Festival (Festival para libertad en Internet apoyando derechos humanos en todo el mundo) al inicio de este año, Gabriela comenzó a facilitar una versión del taller que Valeria Aurora, de la iniciativa ADA y consultoría Frameshift Consulting, imparte para empresas en California. Intenta concientizar sobre la idea de solidaridad interpersonal y el trabajo de descubrir privilegios en nuestras propias vidas. Adaptamos este taller durante SRCCON 2017 para específicamente aplicarlo a nuestro trabajo en periodismo.

  18. Aim to Misbehave: Allies and Privileges in Media Creation

    By Sydette Harry and Gabriela Rodríguez Berón

    Posted on

    A SRCCON 2017 workshop on privilege, journalism, and dreaming of something better.

  19. Event Roundup, September 11

    By Erika Owens

    Posted on

    It’s time for the Media Party this week, plus a bunch of upcoming deadlines and events.

  20. Teaching and Brainstorming Inclusive Technical Metaphors

    By Nicole Zhu

    Posted on

    A session at SRCCON 2017 on inclusive metaphors in tech.

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